In Oakland, Over 75 Artists Join Forces for Black Women's Safety | KQED
Briefly

"It is about sharing out instead of holding in, and it is about conjuring, cradling the space where the power to push back can grow," says Nzinga.
"The artists that we selected, we gravitated to them because they are healing artists. Their work is beautiful, it is life affirming," says Maud Alcorn.
"The community-building portion of it is essential. It's the most important part of having not just Black women and girls..." says Alcorn.
"Since 2019, they've partnered with several other social justice organizations on the Not One More Girl campaign for public transit safety."
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